Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Crazyville War Hawks, and Naomi Klein (DN!)

Hump day, hump day. I've been laughing my butt off for an hour. Tony printed up something by a crazy named Jonathan D. Strong who's with one of those crazy right-wing groups and he'sa wack job. I'm tempted to link to it just for the laugh value but you can google him if you're interested.

He's arguing that the New York Times is against the illegal war. What a fool. How dumb do you have to be not to know that Judith Miller, Michael Gordon and others at the paper sold the illegal war and that the paper still does?

He really lives in his own little fact-free world and when Tony showed it to me, I thought it was a put on. I thought it was something he'd found at The Onion and was laughing as I read along. Then Tony goes, "No, that guy's for real."

I read it again and laughed even louder. He writes for a cult called "Family Security Matters." I hope so. Brains certainly don't in that outfit.

The war has turned a corner, he argues today. And I don't think many would disagree with that statement. They'd probably think Strong had some sense. On a day when the fatalities from the bombings yesterday have risen to over 200, I think most people would say, "Yeah, it went from a lost illegal war to an illegal war that got even worse."

But he thinks it's working. He knows about the mass bombings (or should, but maybe the TV reception's not real good in Crazyville?).

Do you know why people are upset with Congress? (He addresses their low ratings but ignores the Bully Boy's as well as Cheney's.) Because they favor the illegal war and they're tired of Harry Reid, Jack Murtha and Nancy Pelosi trying to end it!

I laughed so hard. What an idiot.

Over 60% of the people want the troops home and the illegal war ended but he avoids that repeated polling fact. They are not mad because Congress has ended the illegal war or tried to (they haven't tried). The people are mad because Congress won't end the illegal war, the one the Democrats campaigned in 2006 on ending.

He cites an article by Alexander Cockburn (and uses The Nation and not CounterPunch). But did he read it? Cockburn's talking about the disgust over Congress' refusal to end the illegal war.

Here's a line from his ending, prepare to laugh: "What Republicans and all those who wanted victory in Iraq should remember is that the NY Times, most Democrats, and the mainstream media were desperately hoping for failure in Iraq.: The New York Times is not preaching withdrawal and hasn't. They did a crappy blame the Iraqi people editorial that got praised when it should have been condemned. But that's why the country sucks so, people like Strong. I don't think he's lying, he seems to believe in everything he says. But that's how we get illegal wars and that's how they continue.

People start screaming on the right that "the liberal media and the Dems want to end the war" and that's not reality. Strong doesn't get it that he's just a tiny cog to those in power (I am too, I'm not insulting him by calling him a cog). They don't give him a damn about him or about any of us. If they did, they'd end the illegal war. But there's too much money being made off of it and there's the thirst to control the oil and other things.

We're nothing but cogs that the Dems whip up with promises they don't keep (ending the illegal war) or you've got the Repubes conflating and illegal war with the flag and God & country so the right goes looney over what they see as an attack on their way of life.

Strong, no one's attacking your way of life, they're attacking your very life. This is all propaganda on both sides to continue an illegal war. And it probably benefits the illegal war. If we see it as a right/left split we call play our parts.

Reality is that it's an illegal war and those in power (with few exceptions) don't give a damn about us. Us is the people. They'll send us off to illegal wars for big business. They'll do whatever they want because they don't give a damn about us.

But they know how to play the game and you get Repubes and Dems in public office, playing their parts, convincing you that you can have a say but you're never going to get it from them.The Dems proved it when they ran on the promise of ending the illegal war and never passed a bill (in either house of Congress) to pull ALL troops out of Iraq. It was all a shell game. We were being conned.

We still all. "Vote for us in 2008, then we'll do stuff!" They won't then either. The only way they'll ever do anything is if they're pressured.

I wish Strong weren't so gullible because he actually seems like someone who really cares. I don't doubt that he does. I don't think he was lying. I do think he's bought into a lie. Because Republicans started an illegal war (with enough Democrats agreeing or being silent), he thinks the war is 'good'. It's not. It's just one more way crooked politicians will use the people, will disrespect the people. He's a Republican, Strong, so I'd expect him to be really offended at this point having supported the war all along. I'd think he'd have to grasp it was all lies. But I guess some people need to kid themselves. We see a lot of that on the left too.

But the reality is, Strong and I really aren't enemies in life. We're enemies on the illegal war and probably a few other issues politicians have ginned up to keep us at each other's throats. But on some level, Strong is arguing for what he thinks is best (I don't doubt his passion and I applaud it). He's still caught up in the cycle.

By the way my right/left is not me presenting myself as a centrist. I'm not. Nor am I trying to serve up some of Obama's Chicken Sop for the Soul.

I am saying that I'm no Katrina vanden Heuvel pushing myths. Dems aren't going to save us. Only we can save ourselves. Dems aren't doing sh*t for the people. They're not doing sh*t for the Constitution. But that's part of the game they and the Republicans play. Put the people at each other's throats and we ignore what's going on.

I'm not at Strong's throat. He made me laugh. And I really do respect his passion. I wish we had passionate voices against the illegal war but we really don't. We've got too many Katrina vanden Heuvels taking up space on the left, lying to people.

Majorie Cohn is passionate on the illegal war and there are others too. But the bulk of them aren't. That's why the illegal war goes on. You've got all these front groups in place to cover for the Democratic Party. You've got all these liars saying things like, "Look at what we did! We made 70 members of Congress sign a letter calling for the end of the illegal war!"

Big f**king deal. They campainged on ending it and we're supposed to say, "Oh, thank you for writing a letter!"? I don't think so.

And maybe this illegal war really will go on for another decade? Maybe we'll have to see 15,000 plus Americans die in an illegal war for the greed of big business before people get outraged enough to stop buying into the crap that Dems are trying to end the illegal war?

But I don't hate Strong. It gets to what C.I.'s been saying at The Common Ills for over a year now, does the left want to end the illegal war as much as the right wants to continue it?

The real problem, I want to argue today, is confidence, our confidence, the confidence of people who gather at events like this under the banner of building another world, a kinder more sustainable world. I think we lack the strength of our convictions, the guts to back up our ideas with enough muscle to scare our elites. We are missing movement power. That’s what we’re missing. "The best lacked all convictions,” Yeats wrote, “while the worst are full of passionate intensity." Think about it. Do you want to tackle climate change as much as Dick Cheney wants Kazakhstan's oil? Do you? Do you want universal healthcare as much as Paris Hilton wants to be the next new face of Estee Lauder? If not, why not? What is wrong with us? Where is our passionate intensity?

I've been thinking about that since C.I. brought it up forever ago. If I hadn't, I would've heard Klein today and probably have been offended. I remember when C.I. was saying it, I was defensive but listening (because it was C.I.). But I really was defensive. I even called C.I. and said, "What about ___, ___ and ___" with this real long list. But it really was (and still is) true, they want the illegal war to continue more than we want to end it. Some of us are really passionate about ending the illegal war but it's not a lot of us. If it was Party Hacks couldn't get away with providing cover for Dems who sell the illegal war (or attack Tina Richards). If the majority of us opposed to the illegal war were passionate, Katrina vanden Heuvel would have to cover war resisters. But we go along. Or we say, "That was a great column!" when someone writes the weakest ass thing. And we get the front groups like Vote for Vets which says (sometimes) it wants to end the illegal war but just goes after Republicans. They won't go after Democrats. They're a front group. They provide cover. Instead of trying to end the illegal war, they provide cover. And that's how we end up still stuck in this illegal war. That and the fact that a whole lot of people play stupid and get offended and start spouting nonsense like, "You can't say anything bad about John Conyers!" Conyers is in Congress and has been since the 60s. Whatever he did do in the Civil Rights Movement, that was a long time ago and he's been in Congress longer than the Civil Rights Movement lasted. He's useless, Nancy Pelosi's useless, Harry Reid's useless. They aren't trying to end the illegal war, they aren't trying to hold Bully Boy accountable for ALL his crimes against the Constitution. They are all useless.

Then you get an alleged socialist like Katha Pollitt spouting off that Cindy Sheehan needs to drop out of the peace movement. She's a good little Party Hack, that Katha Pollitt. C.I.'s "And the war drags on . . ." was perfect. Ma said she loved best how, since Pollitt offered 'tips' of 'kindness' for Sheehan, C.I. offered 'tips' for Pollitt in Punditville. That was funny.

But I'm going to go to sports and this is something a lot will be able to relate to. If you can't substitute a recital because it's not really about playing sports. It's about watching. I was in all the little league and pee wee sports. And my folks were always there cheering me on. And I can remember that and remember thinking I was pretty hot snot. Now I wasn't. I was just a kid trying to learn the game (or piano or whatever) and my parents were cheering me on the same way they probably did when I took my first steps.

And that's what you see with the Party Hacks and Fools today. They cheer on. "Come on little Senator, you can do it, you can do it!" It's nonsense. They're adults and we should be demanding that they get active. Not cheering them on for doing nearly nothing.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007. Chaos and violence continue, over 200 Iraqis dead from yesterday's bombing with the death toll climbing, Cindy Sheehan highlights the Iraqi refugee situation, PR Watch shines a spotlight so it's the Peace Resister to the rescue, and more.

Starting with war resistance. Jeremy Hinzman is the first war resister to self-check, go to Canada and do so publicly. Hinzman, his wife Nga Nguyen and their son Liam went to Canada in January 2004. He hoped to be granted asylum in Canada and began the process to be granted refugee status. In December of 2004, his case was heard. December 13, 2005, he spoke with Amy Goodman (Democracy Now!) and explained, "Well, before the hearing even commenced, we had our hands tied a bit. As you have stated, the solicitor general of the Canadian government intervened in our case, and that's only done in about 5% of cases. Anyway, they raised the issue that they felt that the legality of the war in Iraq was irrelevant to our refugee claims. So, we were unable to argue that in any way. . . . Well, basically, they said whether war is legal or whether it's illegal, it's irrelevant to what you are trying to do here. Which, I mean, I would argue is pretty ludicrous, because that was almost my entire rationale for coming here in the first place." Although the hearing was technically held by the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada the reality is the 'board' for each case is one person.

Before self-checking out, Hinzman had attempted to be granted CO status but, like many, he was turned down. In March 2005, Hinzman's claim for refugee status was rejected by the 'board' (Brian Goodman, in this case). Amnesty International declared (May 2005): "Amnesty International considers Mr. Jeremy Hinzman to have a genuine conscientious objection to serving as a combatant in the US forces in Iraq. Amnesty International further considers that the took reasonable steps to register his conscientious objection through seeking non-combatant status in 2002, an application which was rejected. Accordingly, should he be imprisoned upon his return to the United States, Amnesty International would consider him to be a prisoner of conscience."

."I object to the Iraqi war because it is an act of agression with no defensive basis. It has been supported by pretenses that cannot withstand even elementary scrutiny. First, before the U.S. dropped the first bomb, it was quite evident that Iraq had no weapons of mass destruction. Second, the Bush administration had the gall to exploit the American public's fear of terrorists by making the absurd assertion that a secular Baathist government was working with a fundamentalist terrorist group. There was never any intelligence to substantiate this. Third, the notion that the U.S. wants to export democracy to Iraq is laughable. Democracy is by the people, not an appointed puppet theater," Peter Laufer's Mission Rejected: U.S. Soldiers Who Say No to Iraq quotes Hinzman explaining.

Gerry Condon (ZNet) explained of Hinzman, "He had converted to Catholicism in high school. While in Army training, he was reading about the Buddhist philosophy of living. On Sundays Hinzman and his wife attended the Quaker meetings in Fayetteville, North Carolina, next to Fort Bragg, the 'Home of the Airborne.' They enjoyed the weekly group mediations and were inspired by the Quakers' pacifist message. Hinzman came to realize that he could not in good conscience carry a weapon or kill another human being." Condon, a war resister during Vietnam, has been one of the ones giving back to today's war resisters as has attorney Jeffry House and they have been there for every step of the appeals process for Hinzman and war resister Brandon Hughey. In April of 2006, the Federal Court ruled against Hinzman and Hughey so they carried their cases on up the chain.

May 5, 2007, Jack Lakey (Toronto Star) reported the Federal Court of Appeal ruled that Hinzman and Hughey "are not entitled to refugee status" and that "The latest ruling noted neither made full use of steps open to them in the U.S. to win conscientious objector status, before fleeing here." The next move is Canada's Supreme Court and, as Cindy Chan (Epoch Times) noted earlier this month, that body will announce "late September or early October" whether or not they will hear the cases of Hinzman and Hughey. If the body refuses to hear the appeal, that is not the end of the story.

As Gerry Condon noted in 2004, "If Hinzman and Hughey are ultimately denied refugee status in Canada, they will not have exhausted their legal bids to remain in Canada. They may still petition the government to remain in Canada on humanitarian and compassionate grounds. By this time they may be well established in Canada, one of the criteria for granting this residency. Or they could ask for permission to apply from within Canada for immigrant status, due to special circumstances (if they were to apply from the U.S., they could be arrested and imprisoned for desertion)."

Whatever happens, one thing is known. Hinzman, Hughey and others have based their applications on the illegality of the war and their refusal to participate in it. This has been refuted repeatedly by Canadian bodies even when war resisters like Jimmy Massey testify before them as a witness. In the November 2006, Democrats in the US were swept into power and they campaigned on ending the illegal war. While US Speaker of the House may or may not be able to 'table' impeachment, the fact remains that the American people were promised serious Congressional probes of the illegal war. Those probes have not taken place. It's been no better than when the Republicans controlled Congress because no one was surprised that they would stall and bury reports on the intell that was embarrassing to the White House. Where are the Congressional hearings? As Congress has done very little, it has had effects, in this country and around the world.

Yesterday in northern Iraq, bombings resulted in mass deaths. Kim Gamel (AP) reports the death toll has risen to 200 this morning and it is still rising. AFP notes "growing fears last night that more dead were trapped under the rubble." Megan Greenwell and Dlovan Brwari (Washington Post) quote survivor Khidr Farhan declaring, "I found myself flying through the air, and my face was burning. I felt my leg hurting, and I knew my head was bleeding. Then I couldn't feel anything. When I woke up, I was in the hospital" and Haji Sido declaring, "I ran past people screaming on the ground. I didn't care, because I had to get to my family. When I got home, my wife said: 'Calm down and thank God. We are safe'." Carol J. Williams (Los Angeles Times) quotes survivor Aydan Shikh declaring, "There is no justification for this. What crime have the Yazidis committed to deserve this?" and Subhee Abdullah declaring, "I saw people drowning in their own blood. More people are sure to die."

Paul Tait (Reuters) notes that digging through the rubble continues with many people "dazed and crying" as they attempt to locate missing family members and friends. In addition, Tait notes 330 people are classified as wounded. Sam Knight and Deborah Haynes (Times of London) list the number of dead at 250 (wounded at 350) and quote Dakhil Qassim ("mayor of the nearby town of Sinjar") declaring, "We are expecting to reach the final death toll tomorrow or day after tomorrow as we are getting only pieces of bodies." BBC, citing a Tal Afar official, notes the death toll is 257 (350 wounded) and that the attacks precede the upcoming vote on the fate of the area (it's own independent area -- "Correspondents say the planned referendum makes northern Iraq's Kurds a target for politically-motivated attacks." Tim Butcher and Sally Peck (Telegraph of London) note that the attacks have overwhelmed health care facilities resulting in survivors being "ferried to hospitals across northern Iraq" and they remind that US Gen. George Casy Jr.had recently declared "Our guys are seeing progress on the security front." Casey made those remarks to the National Press Club in DC only yesterday, August 14, 2007 where he made one baseless claim after another (and yes, he falsely linked it all to 9-11). He also stated that "The successes" remain unreported.

Today Amy Goodman (Democracy Now!) reported, "The violence comes as U.S. forces have launched new crackdowns across Iraq. More than sixteen thousand U.S. and Iraqi troops are taking part in Operation Lightning Hammer around the Diyala River. In Baghdad, at least two people were killed in a U.S.-led raid on the Shiite neighborhood of Sadr City. The victims were reported to be a father and his three-year old daughter, asleep in the summer heat on the roof of their home. Nine others were arrested, including the three sons of local resident Umm Falah" and Falah was quoted explaining, "I used to bake breads and sell it to feed them and when they grew they started to work to help me. We though that we would be relieved when Saddam fell, we did not expect that he was replaced with the worst. Only God can beat them (the Americans)."

Hussein Kadhim (McClatchy Newspapers) reports 4 people shot dead in Baghdad (one from "random fire by an American convoy") and three police officers were shot dead in Baghdad. Reuters reports one person shot dead in Madaen, "a member of a joint Iraqi and U.S. security coordination" was shot dead in Najaf, 3 "police commandos" shot dead in Doura and one person shot dead in Buhriz.

Corpses?

Kim Gamel (AP) reports that 24 corpses were discovered today "bullet-riddled bodies of apparent victimes of sectarian death squads usually run by Shiite militias."

In other violence, there are the displaced. Over four million Iraqis have been displaced (internally and externally) due to the illegal war. Cindy Sheehan (Common Dreams) notes that the bulk of the externally displaced have gone to Jordan and Syria: "The refugee catastrophe is going a long way to destabilize the countries to which the Iraqis . . . emergency CPR needs to flow to Jordan and Syria immediately to help the Iraqi people and the two mentioned countries. Significantly, both countries also have vast populations of Palestinian refugees that has now become a generational problem. Solving the problems in Israel will help the Palestinian refugees who want the right of return to their homes as well as help solving our own 'terrorism' problem at home. This is also an issue that needs to be pressed and exposed back in the states." This as IRIN notes the effects on Iraqi children being raised within Iraq "in a climate of fear and violence" And pregnant women in labor try to avoid going to hospitals after nightfall due to the violence. IRIN reports that in 1989, 117 Iraqi women "died during pregnancy or childbirth" but today the "figures has now gone up by 65 per cent." These results didn't happen by chance, they are the direct effects of an illegal war.

Turning to the political situations. At Inside Iraq (a blog run by McClatchy Newspapers Iraqi staff), a correspondent captures the endless repetition: "Did anyone hear about the meetings our great politician would start soon? OMG Here we are again, again and again and again, we are standing on the first square. new meetings but do these meetings have any solutions to the daily massacre that we live in? I'm sure the demands of the political blocs would be the same, each party and bloc will ask for sure for more power to control, more money to steal and more weapons to kill the people of the other sect. and guess what? Again the US Godfather will sponsor the great meetings. its the same old game, keep them busy, let them kill each other on the name of democracy."

Meanwhile the Center for Media and Democracy's PR Watch.org notes that the partisan groups Vets for Freedom and VoteVets have been hailed by the AP as "valuable public relations tools" . . . for elected and those seeking elections and notes VoteVets (with a board of advisers that includes War Hawk Bob Kerrey) " is part of Americans Against Escalation in Iraq, the [WalkOn] and SEIU coalition that pressures pro-war Republicans but not Democrats." Too much reality for some and apparently that includes the Peace Resister who felt the need to team with a failed screenwriter (how did Rooster work out? Oh, that's right) to offer the usual sop that the Peace Resister is now known for. Does anyone else wonder why she only teams up with male co-writers or are we never supposed to notice that? That inability to work with women as co-writers may go a long way towards explaining why the magazine published nearly 4 men for every 1 woman in the first six months of this year. So Useless and Failed Screenwriter team up to offer that 'things are changing' (sadly, not at the magazine) and it's a turned corner for the movement thanks to the useless people of WalkOn.org and others and provide plenty of 'love' to Americans Against Escalation and a hell of a lot of cover.

We who say we believe in this other world need to know that we are not losers. We did not lose the battle of ideas. We were not outsmarted, and we were not out-argued. We lost because we were crushed. Sometimes we were crushed by army tanks, and sometimes we were crushed by think tanks. And by think tanks, I mean the people who are paid to think by the makers of tanks. Now, most effective we have seen is when the army tanks and the think tanks team up. The quest to impose a single world market has casualties now in the millions, from Chile then to Iraq today. These blueprints for another world were crushed and disappeared because they are popular and because, when tried, they work. They're popular because they have the power to give millions of people lives with dignity, with the basics guaranteed. They are dangerous because they put real limits on the rich, who respond accordingly. Understanding this history, understanding that we never lost the battle of ideas, that we only lost a series of dirty wars, is key to building the confidence that we lack, to igniting the passionate intensity that we need.

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About Me

I'm Michael, Mike to my friends. College student working his way through. I'm also Irish-American and The New York Times can kiss my Irish ass. And check out Trina's Kitchen on my links, that's my mother's site.